| Abstract |
The
Drosophila obscura
species group is sperm heteromorphic. Sperm heteromorphism is the production of multiple sperm types, or ‘morphs', within a single male. In the case of the
obscura
species, males produce two or three sperm morphs of different sizes, simultaneously, within the same testis, and throughout their lifetime. A long sperm morph, the ‘eusperm’ is fertile, whereas shorter sperm morphs, the ‘parasperm’, are non‐fertilising and protect the eusperm within the female reproductive tract. Many studies over the past 55 years have measured the sperm length of eusperm and parasperm in
obscura
species. One recent study found that
D. pseudoobscura
produces three sperm morphs, two parasperm and one eusperm, in contrast to the two morphs described in older studies of this species. Thus, the number of morphs made by some species in this clade is still in dispute. Here, we review sperm length data from previous studies and re‐measure sperm of eight species including
D. pseudoobscura
. We used two statistical cluster analysis approaches to identify sperm morphs based on sperm and nucleus length, to test whether multiple parasperm morphs are present in more species than previously identified. We confirmed the presence of two parasperm morphs in
D. pseudoobscura
, and found that two closely related species,
D. persimilis
and
D. miranda
, also produce two parasperm morphs.
D. affinis
,
D. azteca
,
D. bifasciata
,
D. guanche
and
D. subobscura
produce a single parasperm morph, indicating that the presence of two parasperm is a derived feature in the
pseudoobscura
species subgroup.
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